INTRODUCTION OF ENGLISH GRAMMAR
So many
slighting remarks have been made of late on the use of teaching grammar as
compared with teaching science, that it is plain the fact has been lost sight
of that grammar is itself a science. The object we have, or should have, in
teaching science, is not to fill a child's mind with a vast number of facts
that may or may not prove useful to him hereafter, but to draw out and exercise
his powers of observation, and to show him how to make use of what he
observes.... And here the teacher of grammar has a great advantage over the
teacher of other sciences, in that the facts he has to call attention to lie
ready at hand for every pupil to observe without the use of apparatus of any
kind while the use of them also lies within the personal experience of every
one.—Dr Richard Morris The proper study of a language is an intellectual
discipline of the highest order. If I except discussions on the comparative
merits of Popery and Protestantism, English grammar was the most important
discipline of my boyhood.—John Tyndall.
INTRODUCTION.
What various
opinions writers on English grammar have given in answer to the question, What
is grammar? may be shown by the following—
Definitions of grammar.
English
grammar is a description of the usages of the English language by good speakers
and writers of the present day.—Whitney
A description
of account of the nature, build, constitution, or make of a language is called
its grammar—Meiklejohn
Grammar
teaches the laws of language, and the right method of using it in speaking and
writing.—Patterson
Grammar is the
science of letter; hence the science of using words correctly.—Abbott
The English
word grammar relates only to the laws which govern the significant forms of
words, and the construction of the sentence.—Richard Grant White
These are
sufficient to suggest several distinct notions about English grammar—
Synopsis of the above.
(1) It makes rules to tell us how
to use words.
(2) It is a record of usage which
we ought to follow.
(3) It is concerned with the
forms of the language.
(4) English has no grammar in the
sense of forms, or inflections, but takes account merely of the nature and the
uses of words in sentences.
The older idea and its origin.
Fierce
discussions have raged over these opinions, and numerous works have been
written to uphold the theories. The first of them remained popular for a very
long time. It originated from the etymology of the word grammar (Greek gramma,
writing, a letter), and from an effort to build up a treatise on English grammar
by using classical grammar as a model.
Perhaps a
combination of (1) and (3) has been still more popular, though there has been
vastly more classification than there are forms.
The opposite view.
During recent
years, (2) and (4) have been gaining ground, but they have had hard work to
displace the older and more popular theories. It is insisted by many that the
student's time should be used in studying general literature, and thus learning
the fluent and correct use of his mother tongue. It is also insisted that the
study and discussion of forms and inflections is an inexcusable imitation of
classical treatises.
The difficulty.
Which view
shall the student of English accept? Before this is answered, we should decide
whether some one of the above theories must be taken as the right one, and the
rest disregarded.
The real
reason for the diversity of views is a confusion of two distinct things,—what
the definition of grammar should be, and what the purpose of grammar should be.
The material of grammar.
The province
of English grammar is, rightly considered, wider than is indicated by any one
of the above definitions; and the student ought to have a clear idea of the
ground to be covered.
Few inflections.
It must be
admitted that the language has very few inflections at present, as compared
with Latin or Greek; so that a small grammar will hold them all.
Making rules is risky.
It is also
evident, to those who have studied the language historically, that it is very
hazardous to make rules in grammar: what is at present regarded as correct may
not be so twenty years from now, even if our rules are founded on the keenest
scrutiny of the "standard" writers of our time. Usage is varied as
our way of thinking changes. In Chaucer's time two or three negatives were used
to strengthen a negation; as, "Ther nas no man nowher so vertuous"
(There never was no man nowhere so virtuous). And Shakespeare used good English
when he said more elder ("Merchant of Venice") and most unkindest
("Julius Cæsar"); but this is bad English now.
If, however,
we have tabulated the inflections of the language, and stated what syntax is
the most used in certain troublesome places, there is still much for the
grammarian to do.
A broader view.
Surely our
noble language, with its enormous vocabulary, its peculiar and abundant idioms,
its numerous periphrastic forms to express every possible shade of meaning, is
worthy of serious study, apart from the mere memorizing of inflections and
formulation of rules.
Mental training. An esthetic benefit.
Grammar is
eminently a means of mental training; and while it will train the student in
subtle and acute reasoning, it will at the same time, if rightly presented, lay
the foundation of a keen observation and a correct literary taste. The
continued contact with the highest thoughts of the best minds will create a
thirst for the "well of English undefiled."
What grammar is.
Coming back,
then, from the question, What ground should grammar cover? we come to answer
the question, What should grammar teach? and we give as an answer the
definition,—
English
grammar is the science which treats of the nature of words, their forms, and
their uses and relations in the sentence.
The work it will cover.
This will take
in the usual divisions, "The Parts of Speech" (with their
inflections), "Analysis," and "Syntax." It will also
require a discussion of any points that will clear up difficulties, assist the
classification of kindred expressions, or draw the attention of the student to
everyday idioms and phrases, and thus incite his observation.
Authority as a basis.
A few words
here as to the authority upon which grammar rests.
Literary English.
The statements
given will be substantiated by quotations from the leading or
"standard" literature of modern times; that is, from the eighteenth
century on. This literary English is considered the foundation on which grammar
must rest.
Spoken English.
Here and there
also will be quoted words and phrases from spoken or colloquial English, by
which is meant the free, unstudied expressions of ordinary conversation and
communication among intelligent people.
These
quotations will often throw light on obscure constructions, since they preserve
turns of expressions that have long since perished from the literary or
standard English.
Vulgar English.
Occasionally,
too, reference will be made to vulgar English,—the speech of the uneducated and
ignorant,—which will serve to illustrate points of syntax once correct, or
standard, but now undoubtedly bad grammar.
0 Comments
If you have any Misunderstanding Please let me know